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Transfigurations
The EDGE Interview with visionary
artist Alex Grey
by Tim Miejan
"O swiftly spinning 21st-century
Human! We've already missed out on Rumi, Blake , Swedenborg, and Gibran, but we've
been sent a comforter for our time flowering from the same vine. His name is Alex
Grey. Transfigurations is his bible."
-- Bebecca Alnban Hoffberger, director,
American Visionary Art Museum, Baltimore
Long acknowledged as a master of
depicting the anatomically correct human body on canvas, Alex Grey has transformed
before our eyes into one of the greatest of visionary artists, living or dead. In
a new collection of his work, Transfigurations (2002, Inner Traditions), we are allowed
to share the experience of this artist as he continues to journey more deeply into
the cosmic lattice that connects us with All That Is.
He is best known for his paintings
of glowing anatomical human bodies, images that "x-ray" the multiple layers
of reality and reveal the complex integration of body, mind, soul and spirit. Grey's
unique series of 21 life-sized paintings, the Sacred Mirrors, present the
physical and subtle anatomy of an individual in the context of cosmic, biological
and technological evolution. Grey's artworks have been exhibited and performed throughout
the world and are chronicled in the book Sacred Mirrors: The Visionary Art of
Alex Grey (1990, Inner Traditions), the recently released Transfigurations
and his philosophical text, The Mission of Art. Sounds True has released
The Visionary Artist, an audiotape of Grey's reflections on art as a spiritual
practice.
"Ultimately, we are starstuff,"
Grey writes in Transfigurations. "...The mystics speak of unitive and infinite
awareness. If an artist is awake to the mystical experience, his or her art can evoke
these potentials in the viewers."
Grey, who frankly acknowledges
that the use of psychedelic substances has allowed him to access portals of other
dimensions and experience some of the images that he later put on canvas, continues
to explore the evolution of consciousness -- with entheogens, visionary plants and
drugs, and with other forms of journeying, such as meditation. He collaborated on
the recent book, Zig Zag Zen: Buddhism and Psychedelics (Chronicle Books).
Consider his art a report from
the edge...and beyond. Grey, who lives in New York City with his wife, the painter
Allyson Grey, and their daughter, the actress Zena Grey, spoke with The EDGE by phone
from his home and studio.
To what degree do you think
visionary art plays a role in our soul's evolution?
Alex Grey: Visionary art
sure has played a vital role in my own "soul's journey," and I would say
it's been important for many artists and viewers throughout history. Visionary art
is one of the primary ways that human contact with higher subtle dimensions gets
translated into our communally shared physical dimension.
When the subtle dimensions are
translated by skillful and mystically inspired artists, visionary art can provide
an open portal for glimpsing one's own spiritual potential. Think of a brilliantly
glowing resurrected Christ or a many-armed Buddha or a fiery angel. A work of visionary
art can shock a person out of their normal thinking patterns and help them to see
the world in a new way, helping them to transfigure their perception of reality.
Obviously, it's only one of many potential catalysts to healing and transformation,
but I think it can be a significant one.
Do you see a growing trend in
art toward visionary art?
Grey: The short answer would
be "yes." A long answer would point to how consciousness evolution is mirrored
by cultural evolution. The more people having "visionary experiences,"
the more imagery in art will reflect it.
The leading edge of consciousness
is expressing itself through various creative, sensitive people and teachers and
a lot of young people who have become serious meditators or psychonauts. I'm in my
late 40s and many in my generation had the blinders of the material world fall from
their eyes briefly during psychedelic or meditative experiences that allowed perception
of the visionary world. In prior centuries, it was the rare mystics like Hildegard
of Bingen, St. Teresa, Jacob Boehme or William Blake who tapped into the imaginal
realms while they were still awake. Now millions of people have visited these worlds.
Freudian and Jungian analysis has
also taken a deep, long look at dreams and unconscious drives and has contributed
to general cultural awareness of the important influence and vastness of the psyche.
The early alchemical engravers, and later the Symbolists and Surrealists, the Fantastic
Realists and Psychedelic artists have all been mapping these realms of the unconscious
and superconscious. Every generation since the '60s has soaked up the entheogenic
sacrament that has allowed them a glimpse into these visionary realms confirming
the infinite inner dimensions.
Now we have computer animation
and web-based interactive media, which are very visionary technologies, allowing
for greater modeling of these marvelous imaginal worlds. It will always be a great
artistic challenge to discover and effectively transmit the iconography of the entheogenically
inspired visionary state.
In the book Transfigurations
you support the finding of an appropriate context for the legal use of entheogens
in the new millennium. Why?
Grey: Because I think that
entheogens can play a role in the transformation of individuals by giving them their
first taste of the infinite. For most people who take entheogens in a sacramental
and contemplative manner, the experience has the qualities of bliss, awe, terror
and deep meaning.
I'm not saying that across the
board that everyone who trips has a religious experience. That's obviously not true.
But, during an Ecstasy, LSD or mushroom experience, many people feel unbounded compassion
for others and themselves. During a trip, the typical boundaries of our identity
dissolve and you're able to experience your unity with all dimensions of reality
simultaneously. It can be overwhelming, but it can also be a guidepost and affirmation
of the soul's mission in life. A good trip can help us see and feel how perfect,
beautiful and precious the world is, despite news reports to the contrary we get
from CNN. Anything that can help people to see that is of greatest value because,
Lord knows, we need individuals who become committed and responsible to healing themselves,
their families, their communities and the planet.
That kind of "inner soldier"
who is committed to peaceful co-existence, respect and reverence for life is just
what I think our civilization needs. That's why I will always support legalization
of the entheogens, which are, without a doubt, the most important and the most grossly
misunderstood medicines on earth.
Do you have a sense of how they
can become better understood by the mass population?
Grey: I think it will happen
gradually over many generations. Many of the parents of the current teen generation
have had experiences smoking pot or doing some kind of substance, some entheogen
perhaps, and they may not be quite as shocked if their kids become involved. These
parents may still be seriously concerned for obvious reasons. Nevertheless, they've
heard of it and it won't be a complete and total shock. Our culture has at least
heard of it. There's a lot of information out there.
By the way, I'm not advocating
that young people should try this stuff. They should wait till their ego gels before
attempting to transcend it. People can start reading and find out the diversity of
opinions about entheogens. The laws will change when enough people understand the
benefits of the medicine and demand change. Supporting medical marijuana referendums
is one step forward. Voting for candidates who aren't afraid of the issue would be
another step. Joining and supporting organizations like NORML and MAPS and subscribing
to the Journal of Cognitive Liberties are another positive step.
The proper spiritual and ceremonial
context for these sacraments already exists and is creatively evolving. Legalization
has already happened in Brazil and Holland and other parts of Europe as governments
understand that people deserve cognitive liberty and church groups deserve to practice
their religion without interference by governments seizing their sacraments and disturbing
their ceremonies. This is in the face of stiff opposition led by the United States.
The U.S. has wanted every government in the world to have uniformly strict drug laws
that prevent the use and abuse of non-corporate drugs. But how the entheogens came
into that mix is a strange and sad tale. People will eventually begin to realize
that there are churches using these sacraments and that the congregants have actual
mystical experiences, as opposed to just sitting through church services. People
on LSD or ayahuasca can have a direct, face-to-face encounter with their own spiritually
meaningful archetypes. Many native people in the Peyote Church of America and the
Santo Daime ayahuasca Church have overcome alcohol abuse and addiction to dangerous
substances like cocaine and speed in the context of their church services.
Our government happens to subsidize
and support some of the most dangerous and addictive drugs: tobacco and alcohol.
I found it amusing that Time Magazine's scare article on Ecstasy hauls out statistics
like "three people died on Ecstasy last year" and they don't talk about
the thousands who died or were maimed and crippled due to use of alcohol and how
many other innocent people they kill on the highways and all the rest.
In the book Transfigurations,
it's stated that since you completed "Sacred Mirrors," your work has increasingly
focused on the evolution of the human soul. Can you describe that evolution? Where
you see that it's going?
Grey: It's funny, this whole
idea of an evolving human soul. On the one hand, there is movement in our lives.
We are getting older and hopefully wiser, but what most of the mystical teachings
tell us about enlightenment is that it is the discovery of something that has always
been so. We realize our unchanging true nature, which has never been absent. It's
just been covered by layers of ignorance and unconsciousness, like clouds covering
the sun.
Enlightenment is not so much a
hard-won achievement, much less a "creation," but instead is deep relaxation
and recovery of our natural condition. You come to see the evolution of the soul,
the soul's journey, as a realization of what has always been there in the first place.
Perhaps we feel a quickening these days because of the vulnerability and the mortality
that people understand to be part of life. Here in New York we experienced it last
fall, 9/11, where we saw two of our magnificent buildings crumble and take with them
thousands of lives. It affected everyone in New York and I think it affected everyone
in the nation, with repercussions throughout the world. So, I would hope that instead
of disintegrating and regressing into only fear-based and aggressive responses, we
would also see our fears and our concerns as opportunities to turn toward God and
to find our faith and celebrate the love and the time that we have here with each
other. Finding creative ways to resolve our conflicts is life's challenge.
The journey of the soul is a vast,
interconnected web, a meshwork of beings that are all working out their individual
karmas in a collective gumbo, retaining the special flavor in each bite of life.
But, the mystery of where we're going, in terms of whether we're going to have a
planet that's worth living on after we finish abusing it, whether we'll wake up in
time and stop ruining the water, land and skies is a big question mark.
I think there's a lot riding on
this generation. Folks who are alive today need to wake up and do what they can to
stop abusing the planet, and find ways to preserve the web of life. That's where
the soul is headed. It is time for us to become wounded healers. The soul's journey
could be likened to the shaman who journeys to the underworld and becomes dismembered
and gets in contact with all disease and destruction, is shattered, is opened up,
and sensitized and made to see both the value to life and the way to heal through
their vulnerability and breakdown. The shattered person can either go toward nihilism
or can go toward compassion and healing and, so that's my metaphor for the third
millennial human soul.
You sound like you're describing
your personal path through art. Is that where you were?
Grey: I guess it's kind
of hard get outside of your own frame of reference. To one degree or another, we
all go through our breakdowns and we can recognize our lives as a path to awakening
or not. We can take our breakdowns as a way to sensitize us or as an excuse to blind
and dull ourselves. Humanity has to start noticing that we are One. We are connected
with the net of beings who are the life of this planet -- and before we take them
all down, we ought to see what we can do to preserve this unique and extraordinary
family. That's what I think the wounded healer would do. We're all wounded in one
way or another. The question is, can we heal?
When I first started seeing it
in visions, I wasn't sure what it meant. But, here's my interpretation: The eye is
the lens through which we see and through which we recognize others to be aware of
us. We've all heard that "the eye is the window to the soul," so the eye
can symbolize awareness in a deep sense. If you multiply the eye symbol, then you
have a symbol of expanded or increased awareness, and you've got a symbol of infinite
awareness if you have an infinite field of eyes. What is it that could see out of
infinite eyes? Sets your mind to thinking.
The flame is something similar
to the eye. With my art I'm portraying symbols of consciousness, awareness, life,
energy, and so the flame becomes the fire of life, life juice, life energy. To have
the eye linked together by an infinite grid of fire points to infinite consciousness
and infinite life. By contemplating the symbol, our identity is expanded beyond the
boundaries of what we normally consider to be "us."
The Oversoul image uses a human
face made of a grid of fire and eyes linking together earth and cosmos. Sometimes
it's years before I understand or make up some meaning for the images. But, I paint
them because I feel there is some meaning.
And there is meaning that probably
comes to you in the physical process of painting?
Grey: Oh, yeah. That's a
lot of the times when the door is unlocked to the meaning of the work. That's one
of the great thrills in painting something. Along the way, you come to an understanding
about what it is you're doing.
Why did you use the word "transfigurations"
for this book?
Grey: The most famous transfiguration
in the West was the story in the Gospels, where Christ becomes light and is so exceedingly
radiant that it freaks out a couple of disciples who were with Him. Jesus is conversing
with spectral ancestral beings and the disciples hear the voice of God telling how
pleased he is with his son. Now this experience has been one of the favorites of
artists throughout time to portray -- the radiance or aura that surrounds Christ
at this holy moment. The transfiguration story points to the capacity for certain
moments of our lives to reveal a transparency to the Godhead.
I would like my art to be about
the possibility that each of us has to realize our connectedness with this great
Spirit, whatever you want to name it, our inherent Buddha nature, Christ consciousness,
primordial reality, the ground of being, God. Whether you want to go for a personal
or impersonal perception of Spirit, is up to the individual.
I've always been fond of the idea
expressed in Buddhist art, that there are certain objects that, just by seeing them,
can plant a seed for liberation in the individual. And, I thought, "Wow, what
a potent ideal; that a work of art can plant a seed in your stream of awareness that
acts as a catalyst for your own realization." That class of objects is called
"liberation through seeing." Certain Buddha images are like that, but if
it were possible, I would like to find contemporary non-traditional sacred images.
Maybe it sounds pretentious, but most spiritual paths point to the possibility that
we all can access the deep, absolute dimensions of reality.
If we can access a glimpse of those
eternal and infinite expanses of being and bring that into our work, what a great
intention to work with, "to plant a seed of liberation" for your audience
by making and displaying sacred art. That's why I want to build a chapel, and have
the Sacred Mirrors there. Art can be a medium for people to discover universal spirit,
with imagery not isolated to one particular wisdom path, but pointing to the underlying
truth that they all transmit.
Do you have a timeframe for
this creation of a chapel?
Grey: Well, I'd like it
to happen sooner than later. We'd like to break ground within the next five years.
But it comes down to that other interesting force that rocks our world, money. We're
in the process of raising money through our non-profit organization to build it.
Estimates are approximately $3 million and we're not close yet. Are there any angels
reading this? I urge people to check out the progress of the project at www.sacredmirrors.org
and to help us out, if you feel moved to do so. You can also e-mail me at info@sacredmirrors.org
.
What would you call the chapel?
Grey: The Chapel of Sacred
Mirrors has been our working title for the project. The building will contain a Chapel
for that series of paintings. However, I've also been considering a name for the
overall complex called "Entheon." Pantheon meant a place for "all
the gods." "Entheon" would be a place to discover the spirit or God
within.
As an explorer who maps uncharted
waters through sacred art, can you explain where you've gone up to this point and
where you're headed, or maybe you can't put it in words.
Grey: I think it's best
explained through the artwork. I try to communicate my path through publishing the
books, Sacred Mirrors, Mission of Art and Transfigurations. Those books do give people
a pretty clear idea of where I've come from. Where I'm going is continuing to paint
images of humanity in relationship with transcendent light and manifesting the Chapel
project.
To learn more about this artist
and purchase autographed books and posters check out his websites, www.alexgrey.com
and www.sacredmirrors.org
Tim Miejan is editor of The
EDGE. Contact him at (651) 578-8969, toll-free 1 (888) 776-5687 or by e-mail at editor@edgenews.com.
Copyright (c) 2002 Tim Miejan
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